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Matt Shaffer on lisping and why “part of being stereotyped is embracing the stereotype”

This post is part of a series of Queerty conversations with models, trainers, dancers, and, well, people who inspire us to stay in shape–0r just sit on the couch ogling them instead.
Name: Matthew Shaffer, 41
City: Los Angeles. I’ve had a fun little gypsy life. I was born in a small town in Colorado, but grew up in Southern California, just outside of Torrance.
Occupation: Performer, dancer, choreographer and author of Dancing Out of the Closet, a memoir of coming out on the wicked stage. I am also an educator at Studio School, a university in downtown Los Angeles Center Stages. It’s the first of its kind in our country, where students earn a BFA while partaking in professionally performing and auditioning while in school.
Favorite Gym: I gave up gyms about four years ago and moved into a yoga studio. I was always punishing myself for what I wasn’t, rather than rewarding myself for what I am. I actually go to Core Power, which is sort of like the Starbucks of yoga. It’s great for when I’m on the road. You always get a consistent practice.
Related: Stage star and trainer Sam Leicht, on how sports can build a bridge to queer acceptance
Favorite Work Out Song: Anything Annie Lennox, especially the Eurythmics. Pink, if I’m feeling feisty. Queen, recently, because how could you not revisit such a beautiful group.
Recommended Work-Out Foods: I try eat more vegetables than anything else. I’m not afraid of carbs, so I’ll do a carbohydrate. I do high protein from beans and outside sources, but low meat intake. I try to stay away from meat on weekends and practice being vegetarian on weekdays. I’ve found that in do that, instead of giving myself a cheat day it helps me find a consistent balance. I also gave up soda 11 years ago, and avoid dairy since that keeps weight on.
Best Workout Outfit: I like Lulu Lemon. I think their shorts are very well made for men, and last a long time. They have a built-in liner, and feel really tight and kind of remind me of biker shorts or jazz pants. On top, I go to Target and I buy tank tops.
How do you balance staying in shape and having fun? For me, the biggest battle in my life is that I’m someone who believes in living in the moment, and I want to make sure I enjoy everything. For most of my 20s, I was in such a demanding field and had to look really good all the time, so I was constantly depriving myself. Now, I allow myself to indulge, but with that comes with the discipline of going to the yoga studio. If I have a day where I’ve indulged too much, I might take an extra yoga class or pop into a spin class. That makes me feel good.
What about as a performer? Every day I keep a journal. I think that is especially important for anyone, but especially an artist because we are so emotional and can access that emotion very quickly, whether its good or bad. I read self-help books in perpetual cycles like [works by] Eckhart Tolle. If I’m on my own, I write. It helps me stay mentally prepared. That’s how both of my books were born: the need to work through pain.
The book emphasizes your history of performance, coming out and how those correspond to highs and lows in your personal life. How did dance as a creative outlet prepare you for coming out? That was my favorite part of writing the book. When I set out to write it, that was the question I kept asking myself. Am I performer because I knew when I was three that I was gay and needed a way to channel it? Or was the fact that I liked to dance and act and perform just a catalyst to say “Deal with this thing?” I’m not sure. I find it interesting that so many performing artists are gay. I don’t want to stereotype, but it is interesting that so many writers, directors, costume designers, choreographers are LGBTQ. I also don’t know if I ever could have come out without having the loving people that I was surrounded by in my dance company or on a set, because when you’re on a break and you hear someone else’s story, you think that’s my story. It gives you a safe haven to talk about it out loud.
At times, you seem to lean into gay stereotypes in your book. For example, you ask the reader to think of you speaking with a gay lisp for emphasis, even though you don’t have one. Do you think embracing a stereotype can empower you? I do. Look, we’re going to be stereotyped whether we like it or not. That’s not just actors or gay people, it’s everyone. I love that the generation beneath me is trying to break stereotypes, but at the end of the day, there have been tropes we’ve fit into. For me, the lisp…I did some research and that was one of the identifying ways it was safe for men in the 50s to find one another and be with each other. So yeah, part of being stereotyped is embracing the stereotype. As a performer, I learned to accept that because you get typecast. If I had to embrace it for my career, why can’t I embrace it for my life?
How does dance prepare you for everyday life? I tell people if you’re a dancer you can do anything. Dance is both a sport and an art. In order to fully execute the idea behind a story, you have to be physically at the top of your game. You’re versatile. And part of working in a studio is learning how to problem solve and when something doesn’t work, finding a way out of it. I think that dance activates the mind and the body and the soul.
Tip for staying in shape: Love yourself and drink plenty of water. Stay active.
What do you keep on your nightstand? I keep a book I’m reading, my journal, my phone and a bottle of water with a glass. Right now I’m reading a book called Paris by Edward Rutherford.
View this post on InstagramBe present; stillness inspires creativity! #Actors #Dancers #Writers #Create #Collaborate #ShareYourStory #DancingOutOfTheCloset #ChoreographYourLife #PhotoCredit my talented sister @abi.lafleur
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View this post on InstagramThrowing it back to where my professional journey as an adult began @giordanodancechicago circa ‘97! #Dancers #Actors #ChoreographYourLife #ShareYourStory #TBT #ConcertDance #Jazz I swear those jeans were in style, once!
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View this post on InstagramBetween creative projects, traveling, teaching, performing, writing, and spending time with friends & family, I am constantly striving to find balance in my life. . . . #Yoga helps! | #Actors #Dancers #Writers #Choreographers #BreatheThroughYoga #SundayStretchDay #ShareYourStory #ChoreographYourLife #DancingOutOfTheCloset #Health #Wellness #Stretch #Meditation #CrowPose
A post shared by Matthew Shaffer (@funnyshaffer) on
View this post on InstagramWhen life presents you with a massive challenge or new adventure—lean into it! #Actors #Dancers #Writers #Artists increase #creativity & boost #balance for your #mind #body & #soul through #yoga & #meditation! #StandingBowPose | #ShareYourStory #ChoreographYourLife #DancingOutOfTheCloset | #Health #Wellness #SundayStretchDay
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View this post on InstagramHappy #InternationalDayOfYoga from Hawaii! #yoga has provided a space to expand my #artistic, #physical, #emotional, and #mental capacities. Finding #balance, cultivating #creativity, and boosting #productivity through breath; I found #patience. Which #artist doesn’t need that? #Actors #Dancers #Singers #Writers #ShareYourStory #FindYourFlow #ChoreographYourLife #DancingOutOfTheCloset | Happy #SummerSolstice, too! Now get outside and get #downdog!
A post shared by Matthew Shaffer (@funnyshaffer) on
View this post on InstagramThis is my “I can’t believe I just said that” face. My new book, #DancingOutOfTheCloset reveals the secret to accomplishing over-the-top facial reactions. . . And much more! Seriously, if you’re ready for a #PG17 journey into self-discovery, whilst healing through humor—please buy my new book! It’s on @Amazon NOW! #Actors #Dancers #Writers #Choreographers #ShareYourStory #ChoreographYourLife | #WritersOfInstagram #LGBTQ #SpeakYourTruth
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SNL’s Elizabeth Warren Speaks Out on Her Alleged Sexual Relationship with a 24-Year-Old Marine: WATCH
Kate McKinnon’s Elizabeth Warren swooped in to SNL’s Weekend Update to deliver some blistering barbs about current events related to her campaign.
Weekend Update host Colin Jost asked McKinnon’s Warren about big money donors for Democrats who have said they’d rather vote for Trump than her.
Quipped McKinnon’s Warren, with fake exasperation: “You’re kidding me? What? The billionaires don’t like me? Oh no! Look I’m gonna tell them the same thing my grandson told me when he took me to Avengers: Infinity War. ‘This ain’t for yooooou.’ Then again, taking big checks from Wall Street worked out great for the last lady running for president. Let me just skip Wisconsin and change my name to Emails Benghazi while I’m at it.”
Jost also asked McKinnon’s Warren about Jacob Wohl and Jack Burkman’s allegations that Warren had a BDSM relationship with a 24-year-old Marine.
Said McKinnon’s Warren: “That’s Elizabeth Warren’s vibe for sure. Transactional sex with a younger man. Look, rumors have power when they feel true. What has ever felt less true than any single part of that? If you think I’m in a room with a veteran and I don’t immediately thank him for his service and then make sure he’s getting his VA benefits you’re insane. Also, 24! Any man younger than me by more than one day is my grandson. Part of that is true. I am into BDSM – ‘Bank Destroyin’ and Savin’ Medicare.’”
The post SNL’s Elizabeth Warren Speaks Out on Her Alleged Sexual Relationship with a 24-Year-Old Marine: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.
WATCH: Harley Quinn takes on a gay villain in the first ‘Birds of Prey’ trailer

Anyone needing a proto-feminist adventure with a cracked-out clown chick… look no further than Birds of Prey.
The first trailer in the much-buzzed-about DC Comics adaptation landed this week, offering a glimpse into the post-Joker life of his former girlfriend Harley Quinn. Once again, Margot Robbie steps into the bootie shorts and pigtails to portray Quinn, as she did to great acclaim in 2016’s Suicide Squad.
Birds of Prey picks up several years later, after Quinn his finally ended her abusive relationship with the Joker. In dire need of a way to spend her evenings, she teams up with the heroines Huntress (played by Mary Elizabeth Winestead), Black Canary (Jurnee Smollett-Bell) and Renee Montoya (Rosie Perez) to battle the villainous gangster Black Mask (Ewan McGregor).
In a twist, Birds of Prey will reportedly portray Black Mask as a gay man–a move which has already attracted criticism and applause. In the comics, Renee Montoya is also portrayed as a queer woman, though no word on if the film will maintain her orientation. The film also stars Chris Messina & Ali Wong, and will open February 7, 2020.
Watch.
Related: Finally, some details about Marvel’s first out gay cinematic superhero
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